No.
Summaries of information, for instance, often work as well as—and sometimes even better than—longer versions of the same material. In a series of experiments, researchers at Carnegie Mellon University compared five-thousand word chapters from college textbooks with one-thousand-word summaries of those chapters. The textbooks varied in subject: Russian history, African geography, macroeconomics. But the subject made no difference: in all cases, the summaries worked better. When students were given the same amount of time with each—twenty to thirty minutes—they learned more from the summaries than they did from the chapters. This was true whether the students were tested twenty minutes after they read the material or one year later. In either case, those who read the summaries recalled more than those who read the chapters.
Join 25K+ readers. Get a free weekly update via email here.
Related posts:
25 research-based ways to increase your intelligence
10 quick tricks for improving your memory
If you want to be an expert, what little thing is almost as important as 10,000 hours of practice?